This Instagram resurfaces 'Sex and the City's unfortunate fashion choices

If TV series were the problematic Olympics, Sex and the City would be a long-distance runner.

But while you may not be able to bet on the dramedy for an intersectional take, Sex and the City continually raised the stakes with fashion. Now, more than a decade after the series finale, one Instagram account is evaluating those gambles.

A photo posted by Every outfit on Sex & the City (@everyoutfitonsatc) on Jul 9, 2016 at 2:12pm PDT

"We knew that it was something that people would want," Fairless tells Dazed of the inspiration behind the account. "Plus it gives us an opportunity to re-purpose all of that late 90s and early 00s fashion knowledge that we currently have no use for."

"Sex and the City really embodies this lovely post-Clinton, pre-recession materialistic sweet spot in the early aughts," Garroni adds. "As someone who grew with a compulsive love of runway fashion, it was my first time seeing not only the possession of high fashion, but having an encyclopedic knowledge of it revered. I definitely had an understanding that the life portrayed in the show was nothing like actual life in NY, but you kind of hope maybe it is just a little. It’s not, by the way. "

Definitely not. There's no way a columnist could afford "$525 Manolos" and an Upper East Side apartment to house them, but you have to appreciate the fantasy, right?